ECON 201 Lecture Notes - Lecture 11: Overfishing, Rush Hour, Externality

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Excludability: the property of a good whereby a person can be prevented from using it. Rival in consumption: the property of a good whereby one person"s use diminishes other people"s use. Categories: private goods are both excludable and rival in consumption, public goods are neither excludable nor rival in consumption. ex/ firework display, national defence, fighting poverty, non-congested/non-toll roads. Because of the lack of excludability, the private market cannot make a profit, receives the benefit of the good w/out paying for it, market fails to provide an efficient outcome (externality) How gov"t decide what public goods to provide and how much, costs & benefits to society: common resources are rival in consumption but are not excludable, tend to be overused ex/ fishery, result: overfishing (negative externality) Congested roads - solution: a toll is a corrective tax on the externality of congestion.

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